Remote Support with TeamViewer

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Apple has introduced a security mechanism with macOS 10.14 (Mojave), which requires special access to be granted to remote control applications like TeamViewer.

And macOS 10.15 (Catalina) has strengthened the security and privacy even further and requires additional permissions to be given to TeamViewer in order to control your Mac.

Without this access, TeamViewer users connecting to macOS 10.14 or higher will only be able to view the screen but not control it with their mouse or keyboard.

And TeamViewer users connecting to macOS 10.15 or higher will additionally only be able to view the desktop background and the TeamViewer app, but not any other applications at all.

These additional permissions must be granted locally on the Mac and some of them require admin rights.

Please find the different how-to guides for the setup on Mojave and Catalina below.

Note: TeamViewer is not able to grant this access by itself, nor can the access be granted remotely through a TeamViewer connection from another computer.

How-to guide for macOS Mojave and Catalina

How to grant access to TeamViewer on your Mac

If you’re starting TeamViewer 14 or higher on your Mac running macOS 10.14 (Mojave) or higher for the first time, you will be prompted with the following dialog:

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Screen RecordingAccessibilityFull Disk Access
TeamViewer requires Screen Recording access so remote users can see your screen in Remote Control Sessions and MeetingsTeamViewer requires Accessibility access so your mouse and keyboard can be controlled remotely.TeamViewer requires Full Disk Access to access files and folders on your Mac for File Transfer (sending and receiving files in general).

You can also open this dialog by clicking on Help –> Check system access.

By default, all permissions are set to Denied. Please give permission to the system capabilities manually to use TeamViewer as desired. If you or others need to access the Mac remotely, Screen Recording and Accessibility are required at a minimum.

Note: If you are managing Macs in your organizations through an MDM system, you can use Privacy Preferences Policy Control (PPPC) payloads to configure Accessibility and Full Disk Access permissions. Your users will still need to grant Screen Recording access themselves, this permission does not require admin credentials.

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To allow the access, click the buttons shown in the dialog. Eg. click to allow Accessibility, click on Request Access… –  then confirm by clicking on Open System Preferences


which will bring you to the Accessibility section of the Privacy panel, inside the Security & Privacy preferences:

For the Accessibility access, you will need to click the padlock icon in the lower-left corner to make changes. You might be prompted to enter the credentials of an administrator account to continue.

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Put a check next to TeamViewer to grant it access:

Note: If you are seeing the entry TeamViewer_Desktop in your list, make sure to check this box as well.

Repeat the same for Full Disk Access and Screen Recording. Those are required to control your Mac.

Click again on the padlock in the lower-left corner to prevent further changes.

Once you have done it for every category, you can close the Security & Privacy window. The next time you want to receive an incoming connection with TeamViewer, the person connecting to your Mac will be able to see and control your device.

The permission status can be reviewed under Help -> Check system access at any time.

The yellow triangle icon in the upper-left area of the TeamViewer window is shown until you have allowed the system access for TeamViewer:

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